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The legend and lessons of Geel, Belgium: a1500-year-old legend, a 21st-Century model
- Authors:
- GOLDSTEIN Jackie L., GODEMONT Marc M. L.
- Journal article citation:
- Community Mental Health Journal, 39(5), October 2003, pp.441-458.
- Publisher:
- Springer
Geel, Belgium, is the home of a legendary system of foster family care for people with mental illness. The current status of Geel's modern system of integrated community care and the 700-year history of this system (including the 10-year-long, international, multi-disciplinary Geel Research Project) are described. As a case study, Geel offers a microcosmic encapsulation of major issues related to mental illness. Though these issues have been dealt with across time and in all places, here they are contained in a single community. This is a case study can help other communities to identify significant factors that contribute to successful community mental health programmes.
Predictors of family involvement in residential long-term care
- Authors:
- GAUGLER Joseph E., ANDERSON Keith A., LEACH Corrine L.
- Journal article citation:
- Journal of Gerontological Social Work, 42(1), 2003, pp.3-25.
- Publisher:
- Taylor and Francis
- Place of publication:
- Philadelphia, USA
While much of the gerontological literature emphasizes the institutionalization of an older adult as an endpoint of family care, research has emerged illustrating the continued involvement of family members in the lives of residents. The purpose of the present study was to determine how resident setting, family context, resident background, staff background, and resident function influence the provision of family involvement in three long-term care environments: nursing homes, assisted living facilities, and family care homes. Five nursing homes, five assisted living facilities, and 16 family care homes and residents (N = 112) in the state of Kentucky were randomly selected. Results showed that type of facility was less important in accounting for different dimensions of family involvement than family context, family orientation of facilities, or resident need. The findings demonstrate the complex process of family involvement across the long-term care landscape, and have several research and practice implications for the facilitation of family integration in residential long-term care. (Copies of this article are available from: Haworth Document Delivery Centre Haworth Press Inc., 10 Alice Street Binghamton, NY 13904-1580)